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Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2011

Water in Star-forming Regions with the Herschel Space Observatory (WISH). I. Overview of Key Program and First Results

E. F. van Dishoeck; L. E. Kristensen; Arnold O. Benz; Edwin A. Bergin; P. Caselli; J. Cernicharo; Fabrice Herpin; M. R. Hogerheijde; D. Johnstone; R. Liseau; B. Nisini; R. Shipman; M. Tafalla; F. F. S. van der Tak; F. Wyrowski; Yuri Aikawa; R. Bachiller; Alain Baudry; M. Benedettini; P. Bjerkeli; Geoffrey A. Blake; Sylvain Bontemps; J. Braine; C. Brinch; S. Bruderer; L. Chavarria; C. Codella; F. Daniel; Th. de Graauw; E. Deul

Water In Star-forming regions with Herschel (WISH) is a key program on the Herschel Space Observatory designed to probe the physical and chemical structures of young stellar objects using water and related molecules and to follow the water abundance from collapsing clouds to planet-forming disks. About 80 sources are targeted, covering a wide ranee of luminosities-from low ( 10(5) L-circle dot)-and a wide range of evolutionary stages-from cold prestellar cores to warm protostellar envelopes and outflows to disks around young stars. Both the HIFI and PACS instruments are used to observe a variety of lines of H2O, (H2O)-O-18 and chemically related species at the source position and in small maps around the protostars and selected outflow positions. In addition, high-frequency lines of CO, (CO)-C-13, and (CO)-O-18 are obtained with Herschel and are complemented by ground-based observations of dust continuum, HDO, CO and its isotopologs, and other molecules to ensure a self-consistent data set for analysis. An overview of the scientific motivation and observational strategy of the program is given, together with the modeling approach and analysis tools that have been developed. Initial science results are presented. These include a lack of water in cold gas at abundances that are lower than most predictions, strong water emission from shocks in protostellar environments, the importance of UV radiation in heating the gas along outflow walls across the full range of luminosities, and surprisingly widespread detection of the chemically related hydrides OH+ and H2O+ in outflows and foreground gas. Quantitative estimates of the energy budget indicate that H2O is generally not the dominant coolant in the warm dense gas associated with protostars. Very deep limits on the cold gaseous water reservoir in the outer regions of protoplanetary disks are obtained that have profound implications for our understanding of grain growth and mixing in disks.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Origin of the hot gas in low-mass protostars: Herschel-PACS spectroscopy of HH 46

T. A. van Kempen; L. E. Kristensen; Gregory J. Herczeg; R. Visser; E. F. van Dishoeck; S. F. Wampfler; S. Bruderer; Arnold O. Benz; S. D. Doty; C. Brinch; M. R. Hogerheijde; Jes K. Jørgensen; M. Tafalla; David A. Neufeld; R. Bachiller; Alain Baudry; M. Benedettini; Edwin A. Bergin; P. Bjerkeli; Geoffrey A. Blake; Sylvain Bontemps; J. Braine; P. Caselli; J. Cernicharo; C. Codella; F. Daniel; A. M. di Giorgio; C. Dominik; P. Encrenaz; Michel Fich

Aims. Water In Star-forming regions with Herschel (WISH) is a Herschel key programme aimed at understanding the physical and chemical structure of young stellar objects (YSOs) with a focus on water and related species. Methods. The low-mass protostar HH 46 was observed with the Photodetector Array Camera and Spectrometer (PACS) on the Herschel Space Observatory to measure emission in H2O, CO, OH, [O I], and [C II] lines located between 63 and 186 mu m. The excitation and spatial distribution of emission can disentangle the different heating mechanisms of YSOs, with better spatial resolution and sensitivity than previously possible. Results. Far-IR line emission is detected at the position of the protostar and along the outflow axis. The OH emission is concentrated at the central position, CO emission is bright at the central position and along the outflow, and H2O emission is concentrated in the outflow. In addition, [O I] emission is seen in low-velocity gas, assumed to be related to the envelope, and is also seen shifted up to 170 km s(-1) in both the red-and blue-shifted jets. Envelope models are constructed based on previous observational constraints. They indicate that passive heating of a spherical envelope by the protostellar luminosity cannot explain the high-excitation molecular gas detected with PACS, including CO lines with upper levels at >2500 K above the ground state. Instead, warm CO and H2O emission is probably produced in the walls of an outflow-carved cavity in the envelope, which are heated by UV photons and non-dissociative C-type shocks. The bright OH and [O I] emission is attributed to J-type shocks in dense gas close to the protostar. In the scenario described here, the combined cooling by far-IR lines within the central spatial pixel is estimated to be 2 x 10(-2) L-circle dot, with 60-80% attributed to J- and C-type shocks produced by interactions between the jet and the envelope.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Herschel spectral surveys of star-forming regions - Overview of the 555–636 GHz range

C. Ceccarelli; A. Bacmann; A. C. A. Boogert; E. Caux; C. Dominik; B. Lefloch; Dariusz C. Lis; P. Schilke; F. F. S. van der Tak; P. Caselli; J. Cernicharo; C. Codella; C. Comito; A. Fuente; Alain Baudry; T. A. Bell; M. Benedettini; Edwin A. Bergin; Geoffrey A. Blake; Sandrine Bottinelli; S. Cabrit; A. Castets; A. Coutens; N. Crimier; K. Demyk; P. Encrenaz; E. Falgarone; M. Gerin; Paul F. Goldsmith; Frank Helmich

High resolution line spectra of star-forming regions are mines of information: they provide unique clues to reconstruct the chemical, dynamical, and physical structure of the observed source. We present the first results from the Herschel key project “Chemical HErschel Surveys of Star forming regions”, CHESS. We report and discuss observations towards five CHESS targets, one outflow shock spot and four protostars with luminosities bewteen 20 and 2 × 105 L_ȯ: L1157-B1, IRAS 16293-2422, OMC2-FIR4, AFGL 2591, and NGC 6334I. The observations were obtained with the heterodyne spectrometer HIFI on board Herschel, with a spectral resolution of 1 MHz. They cover the frequency range 555-636 GHz, a range largely unexplored before the launch of the Herschel satellite. A comparison of the five spectra highlights spectacular differences in the five sources, for example in the density of methanol lines, or the presence/absence of lines from S-bearing molecules or deuterated species. We discuss how these differences can be attributed to the different star-forming mass or evolutionary status. Herschel is an ESA space observatory with science instruments provided by European-led principal Investigator consortia and with important participation from NASA.Figures [see full textsee full text]-[see full textsee full text] and Tables 3, 4 (pages 6 to 8) are only available in electronic form at http://www.aanda.org


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Water in low-mass star-forming regions with Herschel: HIFI spectroscopy of NGC 1333

L. E. Kristensen; R. Visser; E. F. van Dishoeck; U. A. Yıldız; S. D. Doty; Gregory J. Herczeg; F. C. Liu; B. Parise; Jes K. Jørgensen; T. A. van Kempen; C. Brinch; S. F. Wampfler; S. Bruderer; Arnold O. Benz; M. R. Hogerheijde; E. Deul; R. Bachiller; Alain Baudry; M. Benedettini; Edwin A. Bergin; P. Bjerkeli; Geoffrey A. Blake; Sylvain Bontemps; J. Braine; P. Caselli; J. Cernicharo; C. Codella; F. Daniel; Th. de Graauw; A. M. di Giorgio

Water In Star-forming regions with Herschel (WISH) is a key programme dedicated to studying the role of water and related species during the star-formation process and constraining the physical and chemical properties of young stellar objects. The Heterodyne Instrument for the Far-Infrared (HIFI) on the Herschel Space Observatory observed three deeply embedded protostars in the low-mass star-forming region NGC1333 in several H2-16O, H2-18O, and CO transitions. Line profiles are resolved for five H16O transitions in each source, revealing them to be surprisingly complex. The line profiles are decomposed into broad (>20 km/s), medium-broad (~5-10 km/s), and narrow ( 20 km/s), indicating that its physical origin is the same as for the broad H2-16O component. In one of the sources, IRAS4A, an inverse P Cygni profile is observed, a clear sign of infall in the envelope. From the line profiles alone, it is clear that the bulk of emission arises from shocks, both on small (<1000 AU) and large scales along the outflow cavity walls (~10 000 AU). The H2O line profiles are compared to CO line profiles to constrain the H2O abundance as a function of velocity within these shocked regions. The H2O/CO abundance ratios are measured to be in the range of ~0.1-1, corresponding to H2O abundances of ~10-5-10-4 with respect to H2. Approximately 5-10% of the gas is hot enough for all oxygen to be driven into water in warm post-shock gas, mostly at high velocities.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011

The end of star formation in Chamaeleon I ? A LABOCA census of starless and protostellar cores

A. Belloche; F. Schuller; B. Parise; P. André; J. Hatchell; Jes K. Jørgensen; Sylvain Bontemps; A. Weiß; K. M. Menten; Dirk Muders

Chamaeleon I is the most active region in terms of star formation in the Chamaeleon molecular cloud complex. Its population of prestellar and protostellar cores is not known and a controversy exists concerning its history of star formation. Our goal is to characterize the earliest stages of star formation in this cloud. We used the bolometer array LABOCA at APEX to map the cloud in dust continuum emission at 870 micron. The detected sources are analysed by carefully taking into account the spatial filtering inherent in the data reduction process. A search for associations with YSOs is performed using Spitzer data and the SIMBAD database. Most of the detected 870 micron emission is distributed in 5 filaments. We identify 59 starless cores, one candidate first hydrostatic core, and 21 sources associated with more evolved YSOs. The starless cores are only found above a visual extinction threshold of 5 mag. They are less dense than those detected in other nearby molecular clouds by a factor of a few on average. The core mass distribution is consistent with the IMF at the high-mass end but is overpopulated at the low-mass end. In addition, at most 17% of the cores have a mass larger than the critical Bonnor-Ebert mass. Both results suggest that a large fraction of the starless cores may not be prestellar. Based on the census of prestellar cores, Class 0 protostars, and more evolved YSOs, we conclude that the star formation rate has decreased with time in this cloud. The low fraction of candidate prestellar cores among the population of starless cores, the small number of Class 0 protostars, the high global star formation efficiency, the decrease of the star formation rate with time, and the low mass per unit length of the detected filaments all suggest that we may be witnessing the end of the star formation process in Cha I {abridged}.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Sensitive limits on the abundance of cold water vapor in the DM Tauri protoplanetary disk

Edwin A. Bergin; M. R. Hogerheijde; C. Brinch; Jeffrey K. J. Fogel; U. A. Yıldız; L. E. Kristensen; E. F. van Dishoeck; T. A. Bell; Geoffrey A. Blake; J. Cernicharo; C. Dominik; D. C. Lis; Gary J. Melnick; David A. Neufeld; Olja Panić; J. C. Pearson; R. Bachiller; A. Baudry; M. Benedettini; Arnold O. Benz; P. Bjerkeli; Sylvain Bontemps; J. Braine; S. Bruderer; P. Caselli; C. Codella; F. Daniel; A. M. di Giorgio; S. D. Doty; P. Encrenaz

We performed a sensitive search for the ground-state emission lines of ortho- and para-water vapor in the DM Tau protoplanetary disk using the Herschel/HIFI instrument. No strong lines are detected down to 3sigma levels in 0.5 km/s channels of 4.2 mK for the 1_{10}--1_{01} line and 12.6 mK for the 1_{11}--0_{00} line. We report a very tentative detection, however, of the 1_{10}--1_{01} line in the Wide Band Spectrometer, with a strength of T_{mb}=2.7 mK, a width of 5.6 km/s and an integrated intensity of 16.0 mK km/s. The latter constitutes a 6sigma detection. Regardless of the reality of this tentative detection, model calculations indicate that our sensitive limits on the line strengths preclude efficient desorption of water in the UV illuminated regions of the disk. We hypothesize that more than 95-99% of the water ice is locked up in coagulated grains that have settled to the midplane.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2005

HDO abundance in the envelope of the solar-type protostar IRAS 16293-2422

B. Parise; E. Caux; A. Castets; C. Ceccarelli; Laurent Loinard; A. G. G. M. Tielens; A. Bacmann; Stéphanie Cazaux; C. Comito; Frank Helmich; C. Kahane; P. Schilke; E. F. van Dishoeck; Valentine Wakelam; A. Walters

We present IRAM 30m and JCMT observations of HDO lines towards the solar-type protostar IRAS 16293-2422. Five HDO transitions have been detected on-source, and two were unfruitfully searched for towards a bright spot of the outflow of IRAS 16293-2422. We interpret the data by means of the Ceccarelli, Hollenbach and Tielens (1996) model, and derive the HDO abundance in the warm inner and cold outer parts of the envelope. The emission is well explained by a jump model, with an inner abundance of 1e-7 and an outer abundance lower than 1e-9 (3 sigma). This result is in favor of HDO enhancement due to ice evaporation from the grains in theinner envelope. The deuteration ratio HDO/H2O is found to be f_in=3% and f_out < 0.2% (3 sigma) in the inner and outer envelope respectively and therefore, the fractionation also undergoes a jump in the inner part of the envelope. These results are consistent with the formation of water in the gas phase during the cold prestellar core phase and storage of the molecules on the grains, but do not explain why observations of H2O ices consistently derive a H2O ice abundance of several 1e-5 to 1e-4, some two orders of magnitude larger than the gas phase abundance of water in the hot core around IRAS 16293-2422.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Hydrides in young stellar objects: Radiation tracers in a protostar-disk-outflow system

Arnold O. Benz; S. Bruderer; E. F. van Dishoeck; P. Stäuber; S. F. Wampfler; M. Melchior; C. Dedes; F. Wyrowski; S. D. Doty; F. F. S. van der Tak; W. Bächtold; Andre Csillaghy; A. Megej; C. Monstein; M. Soldati; R. Bachiller; Alain Baudry; M. Benedettini; Edwin A. Bergin; P. Bjerkeli; Geoffrey A. Blake; Sylvain Bontemps; J. Braine; P. Caselli; J. Cernicharo; C. Codella; F. Daniel; A. M. di Giorgio; P. Dieleman; C. Dominik

Context. Hydrides of the most abundant heavier elements are fundamental molecules in cosmic chemistry. Some of them trace gas irradiated by UV or X-rays. Aims. We explore the abundances of major hydrides in W3 IRS5, a prototypical region of high-mass star formation. Methods. W3 IRS5 was observed by HIFI on the Herschel Space Observatory with deep integration (� 2500 s) in 8 spectral regions. Results. The target lines including CH, NH, H3O + , and the new molecules SH + ,H 2O + ,a nd OH + are detected. The H2O + and OH + J = 1−0 lines are found mostly in absorption, but also appear to exhibit weak emission (P-Cyg-like). Emission requires high density, thus originates most likely near the protostar. This is corroborated by the absence of line shifts relative to the young stellar object (YSO). In addition, H2O + and OH + also contain strong absorption components at a velocity shifted relative to W3 IRS5, which are attributed to foreground clouds. Conclusions. The molecular column densities derived from observations correlate well with the predictions of a model that assumes the main emission region is in outflow walls, heated and irradiated by protostellar UV radiation.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Herschel/HIFI observations of high-J CO lines in the NGC 1333 low-mass star-forming region

U. A. Yıldız; E. F. van Dishoeck; L. E. Kristensen; R. Visser; Jes K. Jørgensen; Gregory J. Herczeg; T. A. van Kempen; M. R. Hogerheijde; S. D. Doty; Arnold O. Benz; S. Bruderer; S. F. Wampfler; E. Deul; R. Bachiller; Alain Baudry; M. Benedettini; Edwin A. Bergin; P. Bjerkeli; Geoffrey A. Blake; Sylvain Bontemps; J. Braine; P. Caselli; J. Cernicharo; C. Codella; F. Daniel; A. M. di Giorgio; C. Dominik; P. Encrenaz; Michel Fich; A. Fuente

Herschel-HIFI observations of high-J lines (up to J_u=10) of 12CO, 13CO and C18O are presented toward three deeply embedded low-mass protostars, NGC 1333 IRAS 2A, IRAS 4A, and IRAS 4B, obtained as part of the Water In Star-forming regions with Herschel (WISH) key program. The spectrally-resolved HIFI data are complemented by ground-based observations of lower-J CO and isotopologue lines. The 12CO 10-9 profiles are dominated by broad (FWHM 25-30 km s^-1) emission. Radiative transfer models are used to constrain the temperature of this shocked gas to 100-200 K. Several CO and 13CO line profiles also reveal a medium-broad component (FWHM 5-10 km s^-1), seen prominently in H2O lines. Column densities for both components are presented, providing a reference for determining abundances of other molecules in the same gas. The narrow C18O 9-8 lines probe the warmer part of the quiescent envelope. Their intensities require a jump in the CO abundance at an evaporation temperature around 25 K, thus providing new direct evidence for a CO ice evaporation zone around low-mass protostars.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Water in massive star-forming regions: HIFI observations of W3 IRS5

L. Chavarria; Fabrice Herpin; T. Jacq; J. Braine; Sylvain Bontemps; Alain Baudry; M. Marseille; van der Floris Tak; B. Pietropaoli; F. Wyrowski; Russel Shipman; W. Frieswijk; E. F. van Dishoeck; J. Cernicharo; R. Bachiller; M. Benedettini; Arnold O. Benz; Edwin A. Bergin; P. Bjerkeli; Geoffrey A. Blake; S. Bruderer; P. Caselli; C. Codella; F. Daniel; A. M. di Giorgio; C. Dominik; S. D. Doty; P. Encrenaz; Michel Fich; A. Fuente

We present Herschel observations of the water molecule in the massive star-forming region W3 IRS5. The o-H17O 110-101, p-H18O 111-000, p-H2O 22 202-111, p-H2O 111-000, o-H2O 221-212, and o-H2O 212-101 lines, covering a frequency range from 552 up to 1669 GHz, have been detected at high spectral resolution with HIFI. The water lines in W3 IRS5 show well-defined high-velocity wings that indicate a clear contribution by outflows. Moreover, the systematically blue-shifted absorption in the H2O lines suggests expansion, presumably driven by the outflow. No infall signatures are detected. The p-H2O 111-000 and o-H2O 212-101 lines show absorption from the cold material (T ~ 10 K) in which the high-mass protostellar envelope is embedded. One-dimensional radiative transfer models are used to estimate water abundances and to further study the kinematics of the region. We show that the emission in the rare isotopologues comes directly from the inner parts of the envelope (T > 100 K) where water ices in the dust mantles evaporate and the gas-phase abundance increases. The resulting jump in the water abundance (with a constant inner abundance of 10^{-4}) is needed to reproduce the o-H17O 110-101 and p-H18O 111-000 spectra in our models. We estimate water abundances of 10^{-8} to 10^{-9} in the outer parts of the envelope (T < 100 K). The possibility of two protostellar objects contributing to the emission is discussed.

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Alain Baudry

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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J. Cernicharo

Spanish National Research Council

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Geoffrey A. Blake

California Institute of Technology

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E. Caux

University of Toulouse

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A. Castets

Joseph Fourier University

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